Documentos de Académico
Documentos de Profesional
Documentos de Cultura
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(1) G. Kron,
Electric Ciruit Models of the Schrdinger Equation.
Phys. Rev. 67, 39-43 (1945).
Read it here.
G. Kron
Numerical Solution of Ordinary and Partial Differential Equations by Means of Equivalent
Circuits.
And read that one here.
J. Appl. Phys., 16, 172 (1945).
Gabriel Kron
1901 -1968
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The following short note about Gabriel Kron was found in the
internet 8/2003, precisely here.
....
Casazza: Gabriel Kron, a very fascinating man. What I could do
with the history of Gabriel Kron. He was thrown out of the
University of Michigan. I'll tell you a little bit about him that's not in
my book; I did something else. He was thrown out of the University
of Michigan because he was always fighting with the instructors, at
something like sixteen. He decided to work his way around the
world, and came to Hollywood. He was very brilliant. He had so
many problems because his professors were a couple of light
years behind him. He got back to Hollywood, signed a contract for
$10,000 or so to work on his new experimental movie camera, and
the company that gave him the contract paid him the money up
front and went bankrupt. So he had a year or two with no work to
do. He came to New York City. In the public library he started to
read books on mathematics and became the inventor of something
called tensor analysis. It became quite important but then he
worked for GE. He was unusual and was not easy to work with
because he was ahead of his time. You have to mention him in the
history of electrical engineering because he was a character....
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PHILIP L. ALGER
PHILIP LANGDON ALGER - (1894 - 1979) - was graduated from St. Johns College of Annapolis, Md., in 1912 and from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1915 with a B.S. degree in electrical engineering. He earned the M.S. degree from Union
College in 1920. St. Johns awarded him an honorary M.A. in 1915, and the University of Colorado an honorary Doctor of
Engineering degree in 1969. He worked for General Electric Co. as a designing, staff, and consulting engineer until his retirement
in 1959. From 1959 to 1969 he was Consulting Professor of Electrical Engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. The author
of more than 100 technical papers and three books, Malhematics for Science and Engineering, Induction Machines, and The
Human Side of Engineering, he edited the book, The Life and Times of Gabriel Kron. In 1959 he received the Lamme Medal of the
A.I.E.E.
GABRIEL KRON, { this website: from here on in the original 'Gabe' } the youngest
child in a family of eight children, was born on July 23, 1901, in Nagybanya, later
renamed Baja Mare, a town of about 10,000 people in a remote region of the
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Carpathian Mountains of Hungary. His father, the owner of a dry goods store, was a
devout follower of the Jewish faith. In writing of his family life, Kron said:
"Ever since I can remember, every night at bedtime father used to sit at a table in the
center of the room, in front of him a large Hebrew book, covering half the table. He
sat there, slowly swaying backward and forward, caressing with his hand his long
whiskers, or pointing with his index finger to his temple. For hours and hours he kept
bowing to and fro, reading and studying the Law in a peculiar melodious singsong
brought down through the ages.
"Every day of the year, winter and summer, father got up at five o'clock in the
morning and until six o'clock he continued to study while I lay in bed half awake and
half asleep, following his train of thought by simply listening to the rising and falling
cadence of his tone, without understanding a single word of it. And my thoughts
would slowly wander off into the land of fancy. I saw myself climbing across the
Himalayas into the forbidden land of Tibet; I built skyscrapers in New York City or
erected power plants at the foot of Victoria Falls in Africa. As my fancy wandered
from charted to uncharted territories, I would attempt to transmit electric power
without wires or build rocket planes that could fly to the moon or distant planets. I
was a physician who discovered a remedy for some incurable disease or a physicist
who could transmute the elements." (1)
A boyhood friend described Gabe in elementary school as plump, always lively,
always joyous, always having something to tell. He added, "Gabe inherited the
vivacity of his character and the strength of his resolutions from his mother. When
still a boy, he formed a realist's Weltanschauung and decided the way he should
follow in life. At that time people who knew him well understood quite clearly that for
him the environment of his home town was too confined and that a day would come
when he would act to broaden his horizons."
His passion for knowledge became evident in early school days. His teacher was
accustomed to ask for drawings, and Gabe made the greatest number of these. His
drawings were chiefly maps of different countries, taken from all the continents. He
was quite sure he would soon pay a visit to each of them. In the Gymnasium { this
website: a German & Austrian word, (no connection whatsoever to the engl. word
'gymnasium' ) about equivalent to: high school / first college classes } he studied
intensively physics and mathematics; he also devoted himself to astronomy,
stenography, and the English and German languages. At sixteen, he remarked that
there were no more books in the library for him to read. On the lighter side, he was
an editor of the school paper, and he took a leading part in staging a most successful
cabaret show.
Kron realized even in the lower grades that the Hungarian language would be
useless for one who wanted to specialize in the physical sciences. He said in later
years, "Being subjected during my life time to several inoculations with a new
language, I gradually developed a technique of my own; that proved to be quite
practical for acquiring a reading knowledge of a new language in a place which
offered no contact with people speaking it. As young children we had been instructed
in Hebrew by being handed the Bible and asked to translate it without the aid of
dictionary or grammar, merely being told by the teacher the meaning of each word.
Each of the pupils recited and translated a verse in succession, each one thereby
getting a chance to try his knowledge and luck on the tenth or fifteenth verse. Rarely,
of course, did we follow attentively the translational efforts of the others, and we
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In the fall of 1918, however, the Rumanians took over that part of Hungary,
peacefully and without ceremony, and they turned the Gymnasium into a cavalry
stable. School stopped, and the principal advised the students to study at home and
prepare for a private examination next June. So Kron stayed at Felsbnya,
rearranging his schedule to spend the mornings in teaching the girls while the
afternoons were devoted to his own intellectual needs. From 1 to 2 o'clock he
practiced Hungarian shorthand, from 2 to 3 he solved algebra problems, from 3 to 4
he studied French, from 4 to 5 physics, from 5 to 6 translated German, and so on up
to 10 in the evening. He was then seventeen years old.
With the closing of the Gymnasium, and the rule that the future classes must be
conducted in the Rumanian language, which he did not know, Kron realized that his
future lay in foreign lands, and the search for that land occupied all his thoughts. His
oldest brother came home from the war, bringing fresh energy and ideas to the
conduct of the family store, so Kron hoped for a time that the family might finance his
going to England to study. But thieves broke in and robbed the store, making that
plan impossible.
The Rumanian Minister of Education allowed the Gymnasium to reopen for one
month to conduct final examinations for Krons class, so Kron gained the coveted
diploma in June 1919. He then formed a new plan. Another older brother, Joseph,
who was wounded in the war, came home with a little money and a strong desire to
gain an education. He had dropped out of school after only four years, saying: "I am
not interested in knowing what the stars are made of." Gabriel appealed to his
brother to join him in going to America to study engineering, and he promised to tutor
the older man so that he could earn his Gymnasium diploma in a single year. Joseph
agreed and, with Gabriel's help, obtained a full set of the books studied in the eight
years of the Gymnasium, plus a permit allowing him to take examinations whenever
he was ready. Starting in late October 1919, Joe began intensive studies. Gabe
selected only 10 per cent of the pages from the books - sometimes less - and Joe
learned only those. In January Joe passed examinations for the first four grades, in
April he passed the fifth and sixth, in June the seventh, and eighth, and in August he
passed the maturity examination with a better-than-average B grade, thus earning
his diploma in record fashion.
The whole family now gave its support to the two young men. Gabriel and Joseph
Kron sailed from Antwerp on the SS Mongolia, and in January 1921 they reached
New York.
They were welcomed by the Hebrew Immigrants' Aid Society and began at once to
search for jobs. Gabriel became a dishwasher in a Hungarian restaurant on 116th
Street, earning $5 a week and meals, working ten hours a day, seven days a week,
with one afternoon off. Joseph found a job in a fur shop. Each evening, Joseph was
expected to memorize fifty new words from the dictionary, and both began to attend
free lectures to improve their English. Gabriel went to the public libraries and looked
up universities (a college or an Institute had no standing in European eyes), seeking
an engineering school that would cost no more than $150 for tuition, located far
enough inland to be away from the flood of immigrants. The choice fell on the
University of Michigan. He sent their credentials to Ann Arbor, and the brothers were
accepted to enter in September. It was essential to earn more money now, so
Gabriel began an intensive search for a better job. After trials at necktie peddling,
botling vinegar, sign painting, and steam-pressing knitted ties, he found a job as a
busboy in an Automat at $15 a week plus meals. With this princely income, and by
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sharing an apartment with some Hungarian students, they bought new suits and
saved $150 each, enough to pay their carfare and the $125 tuition.
In Ann Arbor, they had first to find jobs that would pay for food and rent. For two
months they lived on bread, milk, and grapes, but they found a room off campus
where the rent was only $3 a week, and they sold their student football tickets for
some $40. Gabriel worked for his meals, but no pay, as a dishwasher in the Michigan
Union; his brother found a job in a downtown fur shop. In the summer Gabriel
became a ditchdigger at $24 a week. Making their way by these varied methods,
they also organized their classwork to suit their needs. While Gabriel learned the
daily assignments, he underlined the parts that his brother should study; sometimes,
when Joseph worked overtime or didn't know the answer, Gabriel answered for him until the professors learned to distinguish between the "Big Kron" (3) and the "Little
Kron." The latter wrote: "As always happens when a free spirit is obliged to undergo
a prescribed routine, I wanted to study everything except what the curriculum called
for. How to find time to study what one wishes, and not what the teacher thinks best
for one's own good, must be a perennial problem to many an anxious pupil. Finally, I
hit on the idea of arranging my schedules so that by Friday noon the classes would
be all over. Three full days then each week from Friday noon to Monday morning I
was free to pursue my own private schedule of study without the interruptions of
regular classwork. The rest of the week I considered as a sacrifice on the altar of
mechanized education." (4)
At the beginning of his junior year, it became clear that Gabriel Kron would complete
the requirements for graduation by the next June, so there would be no senior year
for him. He began to think what to do next, and his fancy turned to his early dreams
of world travel. In the course of his dreaming he wrote a small essay, "Out- line of a
New Cosmology," describing the universe as an engineer might have built it,
disregarding small obstacles like the law of gravitation and relativity. He showed it to
a lofty professor and received the advice: "Young man, if you want to be a scientist,
never try to introduce anything that has not been approved first by a committee of a
scientific society."
The head of his department invited Kron to return to Michigan as a teacher, but he
declined. And the General Electric interviewer did not offer him a job, as he seemed
not to fit any of the available openings - he was too unique.
The more he considered it, the more he liked his old plan of walking around the
world - it would be a new type of graduate study. The customary post-doctoral study
in a German university could as well be replaced by overnight discussions with the
monks of Tibet. He announced to his friends that he would put on a knapsack and
start on foot around the world. Who would go with him? With no takers, he put an
advertisement in the Michigan Daily, asking any one interested to telephone him. No
one called. With graduation past, he went to work for four weeks digging sewers to
earn the money needed for his world trip. After buying necessities, he had $28 left,
and on a Monday afternoon at 3 o'clock he set out on the road to California. The full
story has been told elsewhere, (5) so it will suffice to sketch just an outline of his
experiences.
When he reached Los Angeles he went to sleep under a eucalyptus tree with just
seven cents in his pockets. He found employment with the U.S. Electrical
Manufacturing Company, however, and began his engineering career by designing
induction motors. Soon he transferred to the Robbins and Myers Company in
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change left in his pockets. After an all-night talk, the friend financed his ticket to Baja
Mare, where his parents welcomed him. The neighbors wanted to know why he had
come home from America with his toes sticking out of his shoes, while every one
else came home rich. No one asked about his travels.
Kron spent several months at home, studying and also courting his future wife, Ann,
before returning to the United States. He took a job with the Lincoln Electric
Company in Cleveland in the fall of 1928, and in 1930 he presented the first of his
more than a hundred technical papers.
That first paper, entitled "Generalized Theory of Electrical Machinery," was the
beginning of his series of papers presenting more and more comprehensive analysis
of machines and systems. He thought that all types of electric machines must be
special cases of a generalized machine, and that understanding the general
machine would lead to the invention of new types. After transferring to the
Westinghouse Company in Springfield, he presented his second A.I.E.E. paper in
1931. It explained the effects on induction motor torque due to field harmonics
(superposed multipolar fields) in the air gap. Since my 1920 Union College thesis
dealt with the same topics, I was much interested and took part in the discussion of
Kron's paper. This was the beginning of a friendship that kept us in close touch for
more than thirty years.
In 1931 he accepted an invitation to join Warner Brothers to design phonograph
motors, with a three-year contract at $10,000 a year. The Depression forced the
closing of his department, however, and for some two years he had a fine salary with
no duties to perform. He resolved to devote this free time to study that would lead to
a much better job after the Depression and, meanwhile, to economize by living at
home in Baja Mare. So he and Ann returned to Rumania for a year. He read widely
in the field of mathematics, becoming familiar with tensor analysis and
Non-Riemannian geometry for the first time. Seeing an analogy between these
abstruse concepts and the complex interrelations of electric, magnetic, and
mechanical forces in machines, he wrote his classic paper on the "Non-Riemannian
Dynamics of Rotating Electrical Machinery," which won for him the Montefiore Prize
from the University of Liege in 1935. He sent me a copy of this paper in 1933, when
he returned to the U.S., and I was so impressed by it that I sent it to my friend,
Professor Philip Franklin, of the Mathematics Department at M.I.T., who was the
Editor of the M.I.T. Journal of Mathematics and Physics. He published the paper in
full in the May 1934 issue of the M.I.T. Journal.
The paper instantly produced wide-spread discussion and controversy. Working
alone, applying mathematical concepts in ways never done before, Kron gave new
meanings to terms and disregarded established rules, so that many mathematicians
derided his work: it was just for show, it was needlessly complex, or it was of no
practical use. When he first put his ideas forward, there were no large computers,
and engineers were little concerned with systems, so it took some years for their
value to be appreciated. But Kron's theories, derived largely by intuition, have been
proved sound and are increasingly useful. Instead of calculating the effects of
changes A, B, and C separately, and then finding that each change required the
others to be recalculated, Kron's methods take all the interrelations into account at
once, thus opening the way to correct analysis of the most complex systems.
To throw more light on the new ideas, I arranged an A.I.E.E. conference in January
1934, in New York, at which Kron presented his views to interested engineers and
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some pure mathematicians. He did so well there that I urged General Electric to
employ him. After checking with his Michigan professor, A.D. Moore, and others,
Vice President Roy C. Muir invited Gabe to join the staff of the Advanced
Engineering Program, under A.R. Stevenson, Jr., in May 1934. He did so, and began
at once to extend and deepen his studies of electric machines, power systems, and
computers. The results poured forth in five books and a hundred technical papers
during the next thirty years.
The Advanced Engineering Program staff at that time included the mathematicians
E.0. Keller and H. Poritsky; a very distin-guished engineer, C.A. Nickle; and a young
engineer who gained distinction later on, Loyal V. Bewley. Bewley was a graduate of
the first class of the Advanced Engineering Program, who took a deep interest in the
ideas put forward by Kron. In later years Bewley criticized Kron's writings, saying that
he used too many words, did not make his points clear, and made simple things
appear complicated. However, this may be, Kron was too absorbed in pursuing his
own widening train of thought to be interested in backtracking or in refining his earlier
work. He was a pioneer, not an educator: He used to imply that hard work is required
for mastery of any subject, and it does no good to make the way to understanding
too easy. He was doing the really hard work of breaking trail, and those who came
after him could follow well enough if they were truly capable. He told me at one time
that he felt as if he would burst - so many books were welling up inside him, calling
for him to move on to unexplored fields.
One difficulty was that Kron always wanted to have his theories apply widely - he
always wanted to generalize. Thus his methods were more complex than required
for any particular problem. They could be used for a wide variety of problems, but
the engineer who was concerned only with a particular machine preferred to use the
simplest methods and took little interest in Kron's elegant theories.
Stevenson left Kron to pursue his own ideas but kept him in contact with the
students in the program. Kron was a great talker and could hold his hearers
spellbound, whether or not they understood him. In this way, he inspired many
students to think more broadly. One student in particular, Charles Concordia, began
to apply Kron's ideas to practical purposes. After finishing the course, Concordia
went into the Apparatus Sales Department, where he worked on problems of power
supply and transmission. In considering extensive power networks, with large
numbers of supply stations and load centers, he felt the need for more general
methods. To help in power system analysis, Kron also transferred there in 1939. As
computers became available, Concordia and Kron did a great deal to establish the
modern methods of system analysis.
Kron spent nights and weekends pursuing his own thoughts. The results appeared in
an extensive series of articles published in the G. E. Review between 1936 and
1942. He also kept in touch with graduates of the Advanced Engineering Program
who had gone to work in various departments of the Company, and helped them in
many ways, particularly by developing correct equivalent circuits for all kinds of
machines and systems. These were published in his third book, Equivalent Circuits
of Electric Machinery, in 1951. His first two books, Tensor Analysis of Networks and
A Short Course in Tensor Analysis for Electric Engineers, appeared in 1939 and
1940, respectively.
In 1942 Kron transferred to the Large Steam Turbine Engineering Department, to
work on problems of stress analysis in complex steel structures. Then he moved
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again, to work on electronics with Simon Ramo. And, in 1945, he moved to the
Research Laboratory, where he worked on the temperature distribution and control
of piles for atomic reactors, and other abstruse problems. In 1950, he returned to
work for Selden Crary on power systems, where his ideas proved to be most useful,
employing the large computers then becoming available. One of his associates
wrote two books solidly based on Kron's work that tell how to use computers to
control the distribution of electric power in large systems. (8)
Kron spent the years between 1953 and 1963 in laboratory and turbine assignments.
In 1963 he joined the Analytical Engineering Division; there he became closely
associated with Harvey H. Happ, the editor of this book, who expanded and applied
his work to power system problems. Kron retired in 1966 at the age of 65. Kron told
me that Happ was his interpreter in electrical engineering, who had his entire
confidence. With Kron's encouragement, Happ has written a book that presents the
foundations of Diakoptics. (9)
During all the years, as Kron moved around the company, he worked at night and on
weekends on many, many ideas, often far removed from his assigned tasks and
beyond the understanding of his associates. As his daughter wrote: "His evenings,
his free time, were all spent at his desk in the dining room. - Almost every time he
went to a movie, he'd impatiently leave the theater part way through the picture, and
walk home. - Even though he was in the theater physically, he rarely paid attention to
the movie dialogue, and throughout the evening every time the audience reacted,
daddy would have to ask mother what was happening. I used to pretend I wasn't
related to that curious couple next to me whose whispered summary of the plot in
Hungarian punctuated the silence around me." (10)
During these years, he kept up an extensive correspondence with students who
asked about his papers and with friends and admirers around the world. Many
students said their success in pursuing graduate education was due to Kron's urging.
In England and Japan, especially, his ideas were pursued, forming the basis for
many papers. On hearing of Kron's death, Dr. Kazuo Kondo wrote: "If I count
scientific friends whom I miss for the rest of my life, Kron comes first. For many years
I dreamed of meeting him. Whether it would be in the U.S.A. or in Japan, I was
uncertain about. He was once expected to visit Japan as a Fulbright scholar.
However, to our disappointment it was not realized. In Europe I followed Kron's
traces in London and Kent as well as in Liege, where he had been awarded the
Montefiore Prize. It was in my plan to find an opportunity to call on him in
Schenectady. But, alas! America without him seems to lose its charm to lure me."
Kron was a puzzle to the company executives who were responsible for his
assignments. They wanted to tell him what to do, and to put him in a place where his
talents would yield immediate, commercially useful results, and to adjust his salary
accordingly. This was difficult, because Kron's value was largely in the inspiration he
gave to others and in distant objectives that seemed to business managers to be
merely dreams. As they tried to make the best use of him, he was shifted hither and
yon. In all, he worked for fifteen different managers while with GE. This contrasts
with the treatment of Steinmetz, under E.W. Rice. Steinmetz was retained in a staff
position and problems were brought to him, instead of moving him to where the new
problems were. Thus Steinmetz became known as the "Supreme Court" of the
company, and he wrote and lectured freely on whatever topics interested him. Kron
had to pursue his own ideas outside of office hours.
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This was no real hardship, however, as the company did give Kron complete
freedom to publish his ideas, and to maintain contacts with a wide circle of interested
men, outside as well as inside the company. Some commercial men, who did not like
the engineers to talk about new developments, said that it would do no harm for
Kron to write, as no competitor would understand him anyway.
This very point, that his writings were voluminous, and not too clear, was a prime
reason for the controversies that always swirled about him. Some who penetrated
the depths of his thoughts felt that they could say it more clearly. Others found
mistakes in his proofs, or things that he omitted, and many of these published their
views. Some belittled Kron, others ignored him or claimed as their own ideas he had
developed. Kron felt all these slights keenly. As any one must be who pursues a
lonely road, he was sustained by a sense of mission and by an inner conviction that
he was rendering a great service to the engineers who would come after him. Some
of his critics felt that he was just plain conceited. After all, it is hard to draw a line
between sublime confidence that one is right, even though much of the world denies
it, and the misguided idea that some foolish idea is important.
Time has shown, however, that Kron was almost always right in his conclusions,
eventhough some of his proofs were faulty. He had a remarkable intuition, an
unerring sense of the fitness of things prescribed by nature, that led him without fail
to the right results. And he had a delightful sense of humor that enabled him to
shake off the hard feelings aroused by critics. He was very much like Heaviside in
his views about critics. Some one told Heaviside that his writings were too complex.
"No," said Heaviside, "perhaps the reader's mind is too simple."
After retirement, Kron continued to work on his theories, with the conviction that he
must write several more books, especially on the crystal computer that he thought
would be his crowning achievement. Just a few days before the onset of his fatal
illness, he told his wife, "My work is so beautiful that I wouldn't give it away for a
million dollars." He died, after a short illness, on March 25, 1968.
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CONTENTS
Foreword
Introduction
H. H. HAPP
The evolution of an
engineering scientist
PHILIP L. ALGER 5
On G. Kron's methods
and achievements
BANESH
HOFFMANN
19
37
Kron's contributions to
the theory of induction
motors
PHILIP L. ALGER 43
Damping and
synchronizing torques
og induction motors
CHARLES
CONCORDIA
53
J. W. LYNN
65
The development of
diakoptics
H. H. HAPP
83
Application of Kron's
concepts to the field of
system engineering
HAROLD
CHESTNUT
121
The influence of G.
Kron in the United
Kingdom
ALFRED
BRAMELLERAND 143
D. W. MORTIFEE
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An Oriental expansion
of Kron's science
beyond electrical
engineering
KAZUO KONDO
APPENDIX
Publications of G.
165
Kron
153
INTRODUCTION
H.H.HAPP (1928-), EDITOR
Schenectady,New York
THIS BOOK focuses on the work of Gabriel Kron (19011968). It deals with Kron as
a person, with his accomplishments, and with his impact on present technology.
Kron was a remarkable individual, a pioneer whose true achievements were
appreciated by relatively few when his works were first published but whose methods
of systems analysis are now widely employed.
His honors included the Montefiore Prize of the University of Lige, Belgium in 1935;
an honorary Master of Science in Electrical Engineering from the University of
Michigan in 1936; the Coffin Award of General Electric Company in 1942; an
honorary Doctor of Science from the University of Nottingham in 1961; and Patron
and Honorary Memberships in the Tensor Society of Great Britain and the Research
Association of Applied Geometry of Tokyo, Japan.
Gabriel Kron was a person with an unusual combination of talents who conceived
new theories by way of coping with actual physical problems and their practical
solutions. He enjoyed and sought out problems that others had unsuccessfully tried
to solve, in the hope of filling a gap in the span of scientific knowledge.
For example, his work on specific problems in electric motors and generators led him
to pioneer in the use of tensor analysis for application in both rotating machinery and
later in static networks. A problem of determining the losses of interconnected power
systems led him to conceive a piecewise procedure he called "Diakoptics" for solving
large scale systems by tearing; in this approach, the subsystems of the larger
system are first solved, and then the solutions of these subsystems are modified to
take their interconnection into consideration. Problems in forecasting and
optimization, in later years, led him to pursue extensions of his earlier work to include
all parameters of the dynamic electromagnetic field by means of the still unexplored
polyhedral network theories.
Gabriel Kron and I were close working associates and cooperated on a number of
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joint projects. I had been familiar with Krons work since the early l950s but met him
for the first time in 1958. In the ensuing four years, we consulted frequently. In
January of 1963, Kron joined the department with which I was associated and we
became close working colleagues until his retirement from General Electric in July
1966. We maintained our close working relationship until his death in March 1968.
Kron was a healthy and robust man and credited his physical strength for his
capacity to continue his work despite criticism that was sometimes severe. He was a
strong believer in physical exercise. He walked home from work nightly, a distance of
about four miles. I sometimes accompanied him on these walks, and we usually
made much progress on concepts and theories with which we were concerned. He
was continually occupied with his work. Work required no self-discipline on his part;
rather the opposite: it took force to get him away from his work.
I recall discussing other than scientific matters on our walks home from work. But he
could stand "small talk" for only a short period of time, and our conversation had to
return to his science, as he called it.
Concepts such as the primitive network, open and closed-path contours, the
transformation tensor, among others, never became stale topics to him; in fact, we
discussed these concepts for hours at a time over a period of many years.
It was a pleasure working with him. He was a warm and friendly human being,
well-liked by almost all who knew him, and a constant source of encouragement and
inspiration. His appetite for work, his motivation for progress, his creative
imagination, and his tremendous enthusiasm did not abate in the least as the years
went by; in fact, he always felt that greater achievements were yet ahead of him.
Kron spent almost his entire career in Schenectady. He loved small-community living
and he enjoyed associating with other creative leaders within General Electric in
Schenectady, a world focal point and research center in the field of electric power.
The present volume deals with Krons life and work under three broad headings - his
own career, the technical aspects of his work and some of its applications, and his
international influence.
Professor Philip L. Alger sketches Krons early life and education, while Professor
Banesh Hoffman provides an insight into his working methods, his personal
difficulties, and some of the technical problems his work posed for those who
attempted to follow it; Professor Thomas J. Higgins outlines the broad scope of
Krons achievements.
Among the five papers which concern themselves with detailed areas in Krons work,
the first paper by Professor Alger describes Krons contributions to the theory of
induction motors, and the second paper by Dr. Charles Concordia, describes Krons
contributions to practical problems in induction motors. Professor J. W. Lynn deals
with tensor analysis and its use by Kron. My own paper describes the problem
through which Kron conceived Diakoptics, its theory, and some of its practical
applications to systems; and the section ends with an article by Dr. Harold Chestnut
on Krons influence in the broader field of system engineering.
The third group consists of an article from Britain and one from Japan. The paper
from Britain, by Professor A. Brameller and Mr. D. W. Mortifee, describes various
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engineering applications of Krons work and his influence in Britain. Professor Kazuo
Kondos paper describes the impact of Krons work in Japan.
A complete list of Krons publications is added to the appendix. By bringing to bear
methods from abstract mathematics on broad problems in system engineering and
physics, Krons genius for generalization and unification made him a controversial
figure throughout his career. But Kron knew what he was and what he was not. He
never considered himself to be a mathematician; his logic was not mathematical but
largely intuitive. Many of his peers in the engineering establishment did not accept
the validity Of his unconventional methods, partly because he often failed to prove
their validity and partly because they did not recognize the need for such seemingly
complex and unproven methods; neither did they recognize the full potential of those
methods.
Time has marched on and the methods pioneered by Kron are now widely employed
and are taught in almost all universities. A variety of courses in system engineering,
netwotk topology and energy conversion, among others, contain material he
conceived, although the source is only rarely acknowledged.
Krons influence extends far beyond the U.S.A. The Tensor Society of Great Britain
came into being to further the understanding and applications of tensor analysis; and
he had a strong influence on the activities of the Research Association of Applied
Geometry of Tokyo.
We hope that this book not only describes the broad implications of Krons work but
will also point the way to those individuals who wish to study hjs methods in depth.
As the editor of this book, I express my thanks to the contributors for their papers
and to the Director of Union College Press, Bernard R. Carman, for his help in
editing all manuscripts and for countless other chores performed in the.publication
process.
FOREWORD
EDWIN K. TOLAN
Librarian of Union College
EDWIN K. TOLAN, a native of Montreal, took his Bachelor of Arts degree at McGill University in 1949 and a Bachelor of Library
Science at McGill in 1954. He earned a Master of Arts at the University of Glasgow, Scotland, in 1951, and took his doctorate in the
field of philosophy at the UniversitC de Montreal in 1959. He has been Librarian of Union College and Professor of Philosophy at
Union since 1962.
Added by this website from a clipping of a local newspaper, date unknown - courtesy of Union College Schaffer Library, Mrs. E.
Fladger and J. Spallholz.
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Todays's Obituaries - Services for Dr. Edwin K. Tolan, 54, of Schenectady head librarian at Union College in Schenectady, will be
at 2 p.m. today from the Baxter Funeral Home in Schenectady. Burial will be in Vale Cementery, Schenectady.
Dr. Tolan died Sunday at his home in 1443 Regent St.
Born in Canada, he had worked as a teller at the Royal Bank of Canada, and served in the Canadian Army during World War II. Dr.
Tolan graduated from McGill University in Montreal, the University of Glasgow, and the Institut d'tudes Medievales, Universit de
Montreal.
He began his library career at Hamilton College in Clinton, Oneida County, in 1954. Three years later be became librarian at
Washington and Jefferson College in Washington, Pa., a position be held until joining Union College in 1962. Dr. Tolan was
instrumental in establishing the Capital District Library Council for Research Resources in 1967. He was a trustee of the council
and served as its first president.
Dr. Tolan established the "Union Catalog" containing listing of volumes in eight countries and developed an extensive bibliographic
collection. He was a member of the American and state library associations and the Bibliographical Society of America. He was a
trustee of the Schenectady Chapter of the National Railway Historical Association and was a member of the friends of the
Schenectady Library.
Survivors include his wife, the former Elizabeth MacLennan; and two daughters, Joanne and Jennifer Tolan, all of Schenectady.
THIS BOOK is an outgrowth of the Schaffer Library Symposium, Gabriel Kron, the
Man and His Work, held on October 14, 1969 at Union College. The editor has
broadened the scope of the collection by adding to the papers first delivered at the
Symposium other papers in order to give the reader a greater opportunity to
appreciate the richness of Krons contributions to modern science and engineering.
He has not, however, lost sight of the fact that the initial inspiration and impetus were
provided by the Symposium and has therefore thought fit to include my comments
on the genesis, purpose and outcome of the Symposium.
It may seem strange that the staff of Schaffer Library took the lead in organizing the
Gabriel Kron Symposium, but there were several factors which contributed to this
development. Gabriel Kron had used the library resources of Union College for many
years and had the respect of the library staff; the late husband of our former
Circulation Librarian, Dr. Philip Stanley, coined the term "Diakoptics" at the special
request of and for the specific use of Kron; his son-in-law, Dr. Michael Pincus, a
Union College alumnus, and Dr. Harvey Happ collaborated in initiating the Gabriel
Kron Book Fund for mathematics at Union College; and, finally, there was my own
personal friendship with him.
Gabriel Kron was one of those rare library patrons who never take the library for
granted. His use of Union College Library facilities was mainly for browsing
purposes. When he would find a book or periodical article which could be of use to
him in his research, he radiated excitement. I well remember one of his most
important discoveries, Samuel I. Goldbergs Curvature and Homology (New York:
Academic Press, 1962). For weeks he told and retold the details of his serendipitous
adventure. The fact that he went out and bought a copy for his own use - a copy
which he could mark and use without hindering someone else who might want to use
the book - was typical of his consideration for others.
Kron gleefully maintained with consistency that he was not a "social lion." This
maxim provided him with a convenient dodge and in following it he was able to
organize all his free time around his real joy - his research - only permitting himself to
be interrupted during, visits by his children and his grandchildren. It is interesting to
note, however, that it was at an evening party in Schenectady that Kron met the late
Philip Stanley, and sought help in his search for a distinctive name for his then
newly-developed method of solving complicated problems in easy stages. Gabes
personal account of this evening led me to suspect that this encounter gave birth not
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only to the term "Diakoptics" but also to a consciousness of the rich possibilities of
publicly disclaiming any pretensions to being or wishing to be a "social lion."
The response to a general appeal for funds to establish the Gabriel Kron Book Fund
was a gratifying one for the family and close friends of Gabriel Kron. I was ill at the
time of Gabes death but suggested the fund to his son-in-law, Dr. Michael Pincus,
who in turn discussed it with Ann Kron and Dr. Harvey Happ. The successful appeal
was made by Dr. Happ with the assistance of my secretary, Miss Thora Girke, who
attended to the details of seeing that contributions were credited to the proper
account, that formal acknowledgments were made, and that proper records were
kept. Contributions were received from across the United States, from Great Britain,
Australia, Canada, France, and Japan; they were small contributions, only two being
$100 or more. Thus, there were many contributors, and most of them were, I am
pleased to say, from the electrical engineering community. I make this point because
during my association with Kron he steadfastly identified himself as a scientist, not
an engineer. This was a distinction made by an embittered man who resented the
treatment meted out to him by the electrical engineering establishment. Frequent
tests, of his reflexes on this point never caught him off guard; his feelings ran too
deep. One would argue in vain that pettiness and narrowness were characteristic of
the avatars in any circle of intellectual activity; in this matter his fluid ability to
generalize deserted him totally. Regardless of the validity of the distinction, it was an
important one for him, and this can be seen, I think, in the paradoxical fact that
Gabriel Kron was a serene man, well disposed towards others, confident in the
validity of his work, and at peace with himself. To identify himself as a scientist was
to disassociate himself from institutional animosity, free the spirit for creative work,
and permit the mind to express itself with magnanimity. That the Gabriel Kron Book
Fund was established for the purpose of purchasing books in mathematics for
Schaffer Library is not without some significance.
Gabriel Kron enriched my life, and as I look back I cannot but regard my having
bought a house next door to Ann and Gabe Kron when I came to Schenectady in
1962 as anything other than a stroke of great fortune. Only an accident of this kind
could have brought together a person of international reputation who had made
singular contributions to the solutions of a number of modern scientific and
engineering problems, and an obscure librarian who, by reason of background and
inclination, held small seminars on medieval philosophy. Our friendship did not grow
out of back yard conversations, nor out of mutual interests in specific scientific or
philosophical problems; it grew out of a mutual interest in walking - walking as a form
of physical exercise and relaxation. There were three distinct phases to this "walking
friendship:" daily late afternoon walks, evening walks, and weekend mountainclimbing excursions.
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Gabriel Kron lived four miles from his work at the General Electric Company, and
walked home each evening, while I lived two miles from Schaffer Library and walked
to and from work every day. Gabes route took him past Schaffer Library at
approximately 5 each evening, the time when I would normally be leaving, so without
any prearranged appointment we just met and walked home together. Since I could
never be sure of leaving on time, nor be sure whether Gabe had passed, I used to
watch from the portico of Schaffer Library across the campus to the walk between
the Administration Building and Silliman Hall, and became adept at distinguishing
him by the rhythm of his gait even during the winter when only his silhouette against
a distant street light would be visible. Our conversation usually began with small talk
about managers who were profit-product oriented, shop-orders, family affairs, the
electrical engineering establishment, Union College, politics, etc. Gabe usually set
the tone of these conversations, and I invariably tried to steer it in the direction of his
research. I could not, of course, discuss his research in technical terms,
conversations in that vein took place only on those occasions when Harvey Happ
was with us. I wanted to know the genesis, purpose, use, and potential of his
research, and especially to probe the mind of a modern creative scientist. Until I
heard Professor Hoffmanns paper at the Symposium it remained incomprehensible
to me that Kron, admittedly not a master of the English language, had been severely
criticized for obscurity, for in our conversations he could explain what his research
was about in unequivocal language and with a lively and vivid imagery. Sometimes
our conversations became extremely animated because my observations and
questions were usually directed to matters of philosophical import. For example. I
once criticized his concept of time and when, with some bewilderment, he appealed
to the authority of Einstein, I merely replied that Einstein should have read the
eleventh book of St. Augustines Confessions. At this point there. was no further
appeal to authority; undaunted, Gabe took off on his own and when we parted in
front of my house he said, "Well, that was a good conversation." Rightly or wrongly, I
considered myself flattered. On more than one occasion I took out after him on the
apparent contradiction of his contentions that, on the one hand, he claimed to be
searching to uncover what was hidden in nature, and yet, on the other hand, always
claimed to be creative. I never was able to draw him out fully on the question of
whether nature was an object of thought or the thought of an object; but he would
always say as we parted. "Well, we have had a good conversation."
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so well versed in Krons work, its applications and its influence, that they were
indeed able to speak imaginatively and intelligently to a very mixed audience and,
perhaps more importantly to each other. Can one come closer than Banesh
Hoffmann in capturing the enterprising spirit of genius? Does it not become evident
from his paper that Krons distinction between the scientist and the engineer was not
theoretical, but based solely on personality? It was a singular delight to hear this
paper read by Banesh Hoffmann who was, in the words of Kron "the one spark that
gave me encouragement to continue my research." The pragmatic aspects of Krons
work came through beautifully. Frankly, I was astonished to learn that his work was
now being widely used in architecture, ship building, nuclear power engineering, and
even in the electrical power industry for the solution of problems first encountered
with the introduction of modern sophisticated generating machines. It was
encouraging to learn also that some of his work has become commonplace in
engineering textbooks. If I was to have a disappointment it came only afterward with
the realization that Krons work was not being used in medicine to calculate the
suitability of drugs for individual patients, though I have since learned that Gabe
himself had received inquiries from cancer research specialists about the possible
application of his work in their research. Finally, the tone and character of the papers
presented at the Symposium were, for the most part, sober and did not lack in critical
content.
As to the long range goals of the Symposium, not much can be said to date. There is
no library center to which interested researchers might turn in order to study and
further the kind of inquiries which Gabriel Kron so successfully set on foot. To the
best of my knowledge there is no one who has yet taken up Krons work. where he
left off; I mean that work which was proceeding, from his "Generalized Crystal
Optics" and was not only to give birth to instruments utilizing "the hierarchy of
self-organizing polyhedral waves" but also in the final phase to at least a
"multidimensional generalization" of the sciences used by electrical engineers. It is
true that exegetical work has been published and is in progress, but does this go
beyond securing the ground already won? Has anyone yet grasped the unique
universe of Gabriel Kron? This perspective of the physical universe so firmly
established in his imagination must be the point of departure for breaking new
ground.
I believe that Kron did have a firm and vivid image of the physical universe different
from anything hitherto imagined, which served as the touchstone for his research
endeavors in the late years of his life. I believe also that the evidence for this is to be
found in the introduction to the second impression of his Tensor Analysis of
Networks (London: MacDonald, 1965). In these beliefs I may be alone, but an
account of the circumstances giving rise to them certainly has a place in this book.
When MacDonald approached Kron about republishing his Tensor Analysis of
Networks, Gabe consented on the condition that not one word of the text be
changed and that he be permitted to write a new introduction. This presented no
difficulties for the publisher, but the new introduction did for Gabe since it was to be
the vehicle for poetic justice. The first and most obvious statement to be made in the
new introduction was that the book was being reprinted after twenty-six years
without a single change in the text; but Gabe wanted to go further and add a general
reproof of his alleged plagiarizers. At this point he consulted a number of his friends,
including myself, and there was disagreement about the wisdom of these additional
points. We spent quite a few long evening walks arguing about an appropriate
approach. My position was that if he wished to publish such a reproof then he should
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not stoop to the pettiness of rhetoric but maintain his dignity and magnanimity. He
could do this simply and effectively by elaborating on his statement about the lack of
changes in the text and by placing the work in perspective.
It must be remembered that for a period during the 1960s Kron had refused to
publish. Then he began to publish again, but very cautiously. Thus he was reluctant
to take my advice about the new introduction. During two successive Saturdays of
intensive discussion about this matter he told me that he was leaving his scientific
colleagues behind and entering a new world, that hisnew discoveries would not be
understood unless fully elaborated, and if elaborated would be plagiarized. In any
event, he had no intention of tipping his hand until he had fully tested his new
theories. As I read the new introduction, I find that he temporized. He did put his
work in the perspective of its growth and development and did indicate the direction
in which he was moving, but all in great generalities. These generalities may be
informative, but if they are not then one would have to fall back on a comparison of
the preliminary drafts of the new introduction - if such drafts are still extant.
We know that with the successful development of "Diakoptics" Gabe turned his
attention to new and greater challenges, to the comprehension of phenomena of a
highly complex nature - multidimensional phenomena. From a philosophical point of
view each such phenomenon would be considered complex because each was
conceived as constituting a system not only of manifold operations, but of manifold
heterogeneous operations. The prototype of this increasingly bold speculation and
research was Gabes "crystal computer or vest pocket computer," as it was
sometimes jokingly referred to, which utilized the simultaneous and heterogeneous
activity of a crystal under stimulation of a single electric source. The important steps
here seem to have been the perception of an analogy between the optical properties
of a crystal under stimulation of a single source of light and the mathematical
properties of an electromagnetic field surrounding an electric current, together with
the successful use of topology to understand and manipulate them.
I say that the "crystal computer" constituted a prototype because I believe thiswork
was successfully accomplished in all its theoretical aspects long before his death, for
Gabe showed me what he considered to be proof of the superiority of his new
instrument. By this time, however, something else had entered his mind. I suspect
that with the theoretical background of his work in developing the "crystal computer"
it was not a big jump for the mind of a Kron to begin thinking of the universe itself as
a crystal. I also suspect that what he was working on when he died was a general
theory applicable to the universe as a whole system. After all the universe is a
complex phenomenon in which many heterogeneous activities take place
simultaneously. Perhaps Gabe had more than a vague intuition about short-cuts for
interplanetary travel.
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BOOKS
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G. Kron, Electric circuit models for the vibration spectrum of polyatomic molecules.
J. Chem. Phys. 14, 19 - 31 (1946).
G. Kron and G. K. Carter, Network analyzer tests of equivalent circuits of vibrating
polyatomic molecules.
J. Chem. Phys. 14, 32 - 34 (1946).
G. Kron, Equivalent circuit of the primitive rotating machine; modifications of basic
circuit adapt it to the analysis of many types of machines.
General Electric Review, 49, 43 - 49 (1946).
G. Kron, Equivalent circuits for the numerical solution of the critical speeds of flexible
shafts.
ASME Transactions, Journal of Applied Mechanics, 13, A-109 - A-116 (1946).
G. Kron, Equivalent circuit of the primitive rotating machine.
AIEE Transactions, Electrical Engineering, 66, 369 - 372 (1947).
G. Kron, Tensorial analysis and equivalent circuit of a variable - ratio frequency
changer.
AIEE Transactions, 66, 1503 - 1506 (1947).
G. Kron, Equivalent circuit of the primitive rotating machine with asymmetrical stator
and rotor.
AIEE Transactions, 66, 17 - 23(1947).
G. Kron, F. I. Maginniss and H. A. Peterson Part I - Differential analyzer
representation.
Institute of Radio Engineers Proceedings, 36, 70 - 73 (1948).
G. Kron, Tensorial analysis of control systems.
ASME Transactions, Journal of Applied Mechanics, 15, 107 - 124 (1948).
G. Kron, Electric circuit models of partial differential equations.
AIEE Transactions, Electrical Engineering, 67, 672 - 684 (1948).
G. Kron, Steady-state equivalent circuits of synchronous and induction machines.
AIEE Transactions, 67, 175 - 181 (1948).
G. Kron, Stationary networks and transmission lines along uniformly rotating
reference frames.
AIEE Transactions, 68, 690 - 696 (1949).
G. Kron, Tensors as organizations.
Matrix and Tensor Quarterly, 1, 3 - 4 (1950).
G. Kron, Classification of the reference frames of a synchronous machine.
AIEE Transactions, 69, 720 - 727 (1950).
G. Kron, Equivalent circuits of the shaded-pole motor with space harmonics.
AIEE Transactions, 69, 735 - 741 (1950).
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Copyright Sept. 06, 2003 by U. Anders, Ph.D.
e-mail Udo Anders : udo39@t-online.de
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